The Legal Envelope at the Gala Exposed Jason Vale Before the First Dance Ended-Cherry

The woman with the hotel badge crossed the ballroom like she had been expected all night.

Her black blazer carried a gold Meridian pin. Her heels clicked once, twice, then vanished beneath the slow swell of the orchestra. In her right hand was a cream legal envelope sealed with a red evidence sticker. In her left was a tablet, its screen dimmed against her hip.

Jason still held his glass halfway to his mouth.

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Nathaniel Russo did not raise his voice.

“Mr. Vale,” he said, “you have ten seconds to decide whether you want to stand here quietly or be removed in front of six hundred witnesses.”

The violinist missed a note.

Jason’s face changed in layers. First annoyance. Then calculation. Then the small tightening around his eyes that I remembered from every time a bill came due and he needed me to believe it was my fault.

“You have no idea what you’re talking about,” Jason said.

His words were calm, but his thumb slid across the stem of his champagne glass until the crystal squeaked.

Brielle took half a step away from him.

The hotel woman stopped beside Nathaniel. Her badge read MARA KLINE, SECURITY DIRECTOR. Up close, she looked nothing like the smiling lobby managers who greeted donors downstairs. Her hair was pulled into a severe knot. A thin line cut between her brows. She opened the envelope without looking at Jason.

Nathaniel kept my hand in his.

Not tight. Not trapping me.

Anchoring me.

“Emma,” Mara said, turning toward me, “I need your verbal permission to release the camera stills and the document packet to NYPD Fraud Division.”

Every table near the dance floor froze.

Jason laughed once.

It came out dry.

“This is insane. She’s a waitress. She doesn’t even understand what she signed.”

My fingers closed around Nathaniel’s palm. The scar across his knuckle brushed my thumb.

Mara looked at Jason then.

“That is exactly the problem, Mr. Vale. She didn’t sign it.”

The words landed harder than any shout.

Jason’s mother, sitting three tables away in a champagne satin dress, pushed back her chair so quickly the legs scraped marble. She had ignored me for two years except to correct my pronunciation of French wine and remind Jason that girls without families were easier to manage.

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